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"Yesterday was a really difficult day," Hamilton, who was knocked back to sixth on the grid after choosing to pit rather than finish a final timed lap in qualifying, told reporters at the historic Silverstone circuit.

"You could say it was a real kick in the balls. I really had to pull up my socks and get on it.

"I went away feeling terrible. I felt I really let the fans, the team and myself down.

Determined Hamilton

"Coming back today to turn that emptiness around was really my priority. This weekend showed you never give up."

Hamilton's second British GP victory -- earned exactly six years after his fantastic 2008 win in the wet -- was not only about personal redemption, it was also about closing the gap in the F1 world championship.

Luck has been on Rosberg's side at the previous three races, the 29-year-old winning in Monaco and Austria and finishing second in Canada.

Hamilton's home win means he is now just four points behind Rosberg, who was still smiling as he chatted to reporters in the Mercedes motor home after the race.

The Mercedes duo will now renew their rivalries at the German Grand Prix on 20 July -- and Mercedes chairman Niki Lauda, a three-time world champion himself, is predicting fireworks now Hamilton is back to his best.

"Lewis from the beginning of the season was on a very good stable level and Nico after Monaco had everything going for him," Lauda said.

"But now Lewis is back on track so I tell you the next couple of races are going to be interesting.

There was also a turnaround in fortune for the Williams team, who saw their cars start out of position after failing to choose the right tires in a rain-hit qualifying.

Valterri Bottas hustled his way through the field with some impressive overtaking to finish a brilliant second in the car Susie Wolff had driven on Friday for four laps before it ground to halt with an engine problem.

"We're on the right way," said the Finn, who finished third last time out in Austria. "One step more to go.

"You see how quick the car is. It was a pleasure to drive. I was able to go through the field. I'm really, really happy."

Fine third

Daniel Ricciardo finished third for Red Bull Racing, the same position his teammate Sebastian Vettel had started the race from.

While the four-time world champion came in for fresh tires twice, Ricciardo switched to a one-stop strategy, which moved him onto the podium.

"I didn't intend on doing a one-stop but we were able to keep the pace, so we stayed on and just held on at the end," the Australian explained.

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"It was awesome. All three of us had a bit of redemption on our plate today. It was a pretty dismal Saturday for us so we're all pretty happy. This is definitely one of my best podiums this year."

A bit further down the road, Vettel found himself engaged in a thrilling duel with Ferrari's Fernando Alonso.

Both drivers flexed their egos, complaining about each other's driving style on the pit-to-car radios but in the end Vettel swooped past Alonso for fifth place.

Early incident

The dramatic race had been delayed for an hour after a crash involving Kimi Raikkonen's Ferrari on the opening lap.

The Finn, who has had a difficult season since returning to the Italian team, lost control as he turned into the Wellington Straight. As he rejoined the track at speed, the car kicked out into repeated spins.

The Finn plunged into the barriers on the right and then collided with Felipe Massa's Williams -- the damage enough to end the Brazilian's 200th grand prix in miserable fashion.

The Ferrari spokesman told the media: "Kimi is OK. He obviously got a big hit. He only seems to be having some bruises to his ankle and a little bit on his knee."

The bruising 2014 championship continues at the German Grand Prix at Hockenheim in two week's time.